Caitlin Kerton adjusts her flowers after taking a picture with friend Samantha McMullen outside the Mrs. Doubtfire house on August 11, 2014 in San Francisco, CA. Robin Williams was found dead this morning in his Tiburon home.

People stand outside the Mrs. Doubtfire house on August 11, 2014 in...

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Samantha McMullen takes a photo of flowers as her friend Caitlin Kerton looks on outside the Mrs. Doubtfire house on August 11, 2014 in San Francisco, CA. Robin Williams was found dead this morning in his Tiburon home.

Flowers, notes and photographs line the steps of a temporary shrine for Robin Williams August 12, 2014 at the home where "Mrs. Doubtfire" was filmed in San Francisco. Williams was found dead in his home on Monday.

The movie connected with people across generations: A father, losing custody of his kids during a divorce, goes to astonishing lengths to spend time with them.

On Tuesday, the San Francisco house where the 1993 classic "Mrs. Doubtfire" came to life became another kind of touch point - a place for fans to connect, one last time, with the movie's late star, Robin Williams, who died Monday in an apparent suicide.

Hundreds flocked to the Pacific Heights Victorian to light candles, place flowers on the front stoop or just pause and remember the Bay Area comedian and actor.

"There was really no other place for me to pay my respects," said San Francisco resident Mike Orlick, 31, who grew up watching comedians like Williams, Whoopi Goldberg and Billy Crystal. "This was the first thing I knew to be comedy."

Orlick gripped a cup of coffee and, like many, just stood in silence outside the Steiner Street home.

Mayah Curtis, a San Francisco native, also visited the makeshift memorial, explaining that she felt like she was mourning a close friend.

"Although he was a really big celebrity, you always felt like you knew him," she said. "He was real. He was local."

Curtis was on a bus Monday when she learned Williams had committed suicide. The news, she said, silenced her fellow commuters and had everyone glued to their phones.

Alexandra Psorogianni, a Swedish flight attendant on a layover in San Francisco, was so moved by the actor that she delivered a floral bouquet to Steiner Street.

For her, Williams' character in "Mrs. Doubtfire," a man who dresses up as an elderly housekeeper and nanny so he can care for his children in his ex-wife's home, represented a fond memory.

"It was just the way he acted," Psorogianni said. "You felt like you really connected with him."

A sequel to the hit movie was in the works, but reports Tuesday suggested that it wasn't going to happen without Williams.

The owner of the famous Pacific Heights home since 1997, Douglas Ousterhout, is a doctor with a fitting specialty. He's one of the country's foremost facial feminization surgeons.

On Tuesday, he said he was a Williams fan and was saddened by the actor's death. But he admitted he had never actually sat down and watched the movie.

"I've seen bits and pieces," he said.

Ousterhout said he doesn't mind that his home became, long before this week, a destination for devotees of the actor. Williams buffs have regularly driven by, or arrived at his door, or even tried to peek in the windows.

On Monday night, though, it became a little much.

"I didn't bother coming home for dinner," he said. "The place was packed."